Konishi Taizo 8-dan died last month (February 2011). He will be barely known in the west, but he was a well-known go writer in his own right, and was also an amanuensis for Fujisawa Hideyuki (one of those often disparagingly referred to as "ghost writers" by knowing ones not quite in the know). He was also associated with Fujisawa in his real estate business, and so deserves a medal of sorts. He did once promise to write a book about the "Fujisawa only I know". He didn't, but most of the details have become known anyway, in Japan at least.
His literary output included this poignant haiku, selected (wisely, I think) by Akiyama Kenji.
朝寒や富士白きまで傷痛む
(Cold morning! The pain will be felt as long as Mount Fuji remains white.) Actually, the season word asasamu is not one that finds favour nowadays, according to Akiyama, so saying this is a properly done haiku might cause pain to nitpickers, but personally I think the old-fashioned choice adds poignancy. The pain he refers to is unknown, but of course that adds to a haiku.
The generation gap implied here is faintly echoed in the fact that Konishi was left-handed. That's nothing special today, as Iyama Yuta shows, but in Konishi's day he was bellowed at by his insei teacher: "Idiot! Go is played with the right hand!" Rather than be humiliated, he left the insei school and went to study French at Waseda University (because he liked French films). But he did become pro eventually, at age 28, reaching a very respectable 7-dan (his 8-dan was the usual retirement "gold watch").
One of go's characters sadly passed, but you have possibly unknowingly read many of his words...